S DAREDEVILS OF NIAGARA r . W Our 18c and 25c -SUIRTINO MADRAS White grounds with black and colored de signs; 32-inch wide, in the basement gingham department, 19'a Monday, yd... WASH DRESSES Choice of 300 Up-to-date Sum mar Drsses, worth up to 110.00, at $3.95 25c MERCERIZED POPLINS, AT 10c PER YARD Think of buying the best poplins, the kind you will want for late summer and early fall wear at such a low price. We do not offer remnants or odd Iota. Every piece perfect and fresh from the mill. Beautiful blues, pink, tan, gray, green, red, brown, olive, old rose, a lavender, also black and white. Best III bargain of the wash goods season, yd.. Basement WOMEN'S LINEN SKIRTS Just the thing for serviceable summer wear, worth up to $8.60, second floor, Allover EMUilOIjiEii. IES and FLOUNCING Some of the finest Swiss embroidered highest grade flouncings and nllovers, scalloped and hemstitched, worth pn up to fl.26 a yard, per yard, at vw Tumbling Wateri the Scene of Many . Thrilling: 1'eats. SALE 27-inch flouncings, skirtings nnd all overs; Swiss, nainsook nnd some cam bric: suitable for making entire dresses, waists, etc, worth , up to Hoc n yard; on big bargain square, 9 Op yard, at vL DEATH RIDES FALLS ASP GORGE mi the tlalr Ralslac kat Hr Brta Trtvd tkt Mad i ' Watcra mm 4 What Haa4 ta ta Prlormri. $2.98 TIIE OMAHA SUNDAY "PEE: JUT A 23. 1911. Niagara Falls, itself a mom wonderful sight, haa bn the acme of some of the moat marvellous acts especially of daring M'W known to man, but never waa so unique a conquering; of nature by man as took placa at the falls on June 27, when Uncoln Beaohey tirclrd over th Horse shoe, swooped under the arches of the up per steel bridge and down the gorge to the whirlpool In the latent toninvaur f sci ence, a biplane. Beachey Is no amateur flyer. Home oi his flights hava been hair-raising. Yet "It waa the most exciting trip of my life." he said after landing at Niagara Fall, unt. Two hundred thousnml persons were gathered at Che' falls to f ee the bird-man la a heretofore untried feat. The occasion reminded many of tlio days when fool hardy adventurers tempted fate by going over the falls, by trying: to swim the rap Ids, or through the whirlpool; or. In years 'way back tn time, mtn and women walked, ran, danced, or skipped across the open mouthed chasm on a tightrope. The Inter est shown ly. ttie crowd was the same; the palpitation )hl the daring aviator be sucked downward by treacherous and un known air curenta were as throbblriK u when thousnnds of eyes watched an In trepid swimmer battering head nnd body against the raging waves of tiie whirlpool. Beachey'a performance was preceded by a rush through the gorge rapids In a barrel by "Bobby" Leach, who has now made the trip five times. Each time he has started from the Maid of the Mist lnnding and heretofore his assistants have been on hand to pull his barrel out with grappling hooka when the gorKe rapids had been passed. The other, day his barrel gained such a momentum that he waa carried be yond reach of hla men and on Into the Whirlpool Kaplds. There he was tossed and turned and flung about fearfully. To make matters worse, his barrel weight shifted, throwing the air vent out of gear, and leaving a small hole through which the water rushed. When the barrel emerged from the vortex grappling hooks were used to land It Ieach still lived, although ha was taken to a hospital. These attempts to display a superiority over nature have been many and varied. Perhaps the first man who ever traveled to Niagara Falls with the avowed purpose of performing a feat hitherto never at tempted was 6am Patch, a mill hand em ployed In a factory above Fawtucket Falls, Rhode Island. He may have been Inspired to his act by the beautiful legend current among the Indians of the day that the god of the falls demanded at least one life a year, and that,' to enjoy the favor of this god, the most beautiful maiden In the tribe waa sent over the falls as a sacrifice. Or his Inspiration may have come from his presence In Niagara rails In September, 1R29, at which lime the condemned brig Michigan waa sent over the cataract aftor being loaded with panic stricken Wild ani mal. , Dtvlax Into the Hirer. At home Sam Patch, used to bathe with companions and enyuge in high Jumping. First he dovo from a bridge into a deep pool; then, not satisfied wtlh such daring, sought greater heights on the roofs of nearby mill, in thin manner Patch de veloped ability and ambition. Noticing the enormous crowd which the destruction of the Michigan took to the falls, he resolved to profit by the excitement, lie built a wooden towtr ninety feet high at the water's edge, at the foot of the Biddie staircase on Uoat Island. From a platform on top of this' he leaped into the waters of the lower- Niagara river. His act was safely performed, but lie lost his life soon afterward by a high dive lit llocliesler. HlBtory does not show that' anyone thought of Niagara . bulls as a scene of notoriety or advertisement for thirty years after Patch made his dive. Then, In June, M. Blondin, a Frenchman, appeared with hfs business manager; Harry Colcord, and arranged for the falls as a background or underground, as It were for his special line of endeavor. Ilu 'announced' his in tention of atretchlng a tight rope across the gorge from Goat inland to the Canadian baiik. At first he tViund few believers In his feat. It waa said, he would never do it. But he Inspired confidence by daily walking Up and downf the guys of the old railway suspension bridge, smoking a uigar. , in June he stretched his rope at a place known as White's l'leuhure Grounds. Ilia Cable .was about 1,) feet .lona, and with It came fully 30.UW feet of rope lor guys. At first a sev en-e,lghilia inch ropo was car ried across the gorge and it was thought, when the cable had been drawn' to within 200 feet of the Canadian bank, that this rope would not be strong enough to land it. Blondin tied a rope about his body and walked out on the. small rope and attached another rope to the cable. Blus Wlr Blondin established a reputation for him self even before he walked across the gorKe. For days he gave exhibitions at the pleas ure grounds, performing wonderfully on a wire. . Finally, at S o'clock on the afternoon of June 10, 1S5S. he started out on the cable from the American side. When about 100 feet out he sat down, lay on his back, stood on one foot, and then renamed his trip. He' repeated this by-play many time. At one time the Maid of the Mist came up the river, loaded with passengers. Blondin dropped a cord to the deck and pulled up a bottle, from vtUch he drank. Then, leaping to his feet. ' without touching bis hands to the cable, he - continued his walk to the Canadian cliff. . He waa on the rope eighteen minutes. Half an hour After finishing this trip he walked on the cable back, to the' American side, making this Journew In seven minutes. He then took up a collection. He made 'a second trip on July 4 of the same year, this time walking with a sack over his head and body. This he did again oa July 14, Millard Fillmore then being one of the spectators. When he reached Canada ha dressed as a monkey, and trundled a wheelbarrow over the rope. Another trip was made on August S, at which time Blondin stood on his head. At another time - ha, carried his manager on hla back across Jhe gorge. All these tripe had been made by day light. On August SI. however, Blendin made a' night trip. At the ends of the rope searchlights were placed, and colored lan terns were put on the ends of his balancing ' pole. When he reached the middle of the rope the lights on his pole went out. and It ' Was only by feeling the rope for vibrations that hla attendants were able to tell whether he waa still walking or had fallen Into the depth below. At another time. In the same year, the daring performer walked with his legs shackled and baskets on his feet. Shortly after this he ate a meal while " tn the ndddle of the cable. In the following year Blondla walked across the whirlpool rapids, with the Prince . ef Wales the late King Edward among tbe spectator. ' He carried Colcord on his baaa. U crossed walking backward. He 8 wmmmmmmmmmwmmmammfmmmmmtmBmtwmmmtwmm rs- 1 . . - . . ar- , .... - ALL SILK PONGEE, At 49c a Yard All. pure silk pongee iu the natural color. Will wash and wtar per fectly, 76c and a si 89c grade, per 4lfP yard, at "v LfiST WOMEN'S LONG SILK GLOVES Kayser's 16-button length gloves, double tipped fingers, white, black, pongee, tan, navy, grey, sky aj and pink, at, . St (III per pair 81x90 SEAMLESS BLEACHED SHEETS Made from round thread sheeting that will wash snow white, 69c values, basement muslin department, each . 50c IMPORTED WASH FABRICS Fancy Marquisettes, voiles, Bilk and cotton novelties, or gandies, and many other pretty weaves, 60c gim to 86c values, Zill at, yard "wv GOLD FILLED BAGS With soldered links. Kacii bag carries a guarantee not to tarnish within 5 years, at, $15, $20, $25 STAMPED CORSET COVERS On best quality Frencn nain sook with three skeins floss for working, In all the new French and eyelet m rv designs, special, 1 sC BRANDEIS STORES rrossad blindfolded. And he crossed on stilts. Kavlo-atlna- the Whirlpool. While theBe feats were taking place or rather, during Intervals a new feature was added. It haa been generally believed that ttie lower river is unnavlRable. Yet on June 6, 1861, Captain Joel Robinson of the Maid of the Mist. In company with two as sociates, drove his boat downward. The MalJ was heavily mortgaged at the time, and Captain Robinson did not see any way to relief but one. This one he chose. In stead .of turning her In the direction of the falls, ho pointed her to the rapids, and suried. I'nder lull steam she plunged Into the waters, going through the whitecaps with a rush, tjhe lost her smokestack. Soon she wns in the whirlpool, rocking and thumping. But she obeyed her rudder and Robinson soon had her on her way toward peaceful waters. The feat remained the sol itary wondor of Its kind for a .quarter of a century. Captain Mittthew Webb, a swimmer fa mous In Kngland, left his home In 1S83, an nouncing he would give battle to the cur rents of the Niagara gorge. He entered a small boat on July 24, 1SS3, and started down the river. With nothing on but a pair of red trunks he leaped Into the river while yet several hundred feet from the rapids. As he passed under the suspension bridge he swam strongly, his own strong stroke hurling him right into the thickest of the waves. For a short time he could bo seen battling with the waves, and then he disappeared. Four days later his body was recovered. HI failure inspired other men to take the chance. There waa In success the glory of being able to say one hod done what the famous Captain Webb had been unable to do. Carlisle I). Graham, a Phila delphia cooper, therefore shortly announced that he would make a barrel which would go through the rapids. His barrel was weighted at one end ao that It would float nearly upright. He made the trip success fully, being In the barrel thirty-five min utes, and going down the entire gorge to Lewlston. Later he made another trip, this time with his head protruding from the barrel. -This trip also was successful, but he was rendered almost deaf by contact with the big waves. In all he made five trips, being almost suffocated on his last Era of Boats. Then came the era of boa Is destined to taunt nature and mako her yield to victory. In a seventeen-foot boat, air-cushioned. Charles A. Percy of Niagara Falls, made three trips In 1M7. On the lust trip he los his boat. R. W. Flack of Syracuse, who thought he had invented a lire-saving boat, tried It out In July. lsss. He fixed a harness about his waist, and. the boat turning, he was held a prisoner to the waves and rocks. For an hour the boat tossed In the whlrl oool. Percy, who was to have had a race with Flack If this trip was successful, re covered the fragments of the boat and Flack's body. W. a. Campbell made an open flat bot tomed boat. In which he started to make the trip. It capslxed, however, before the whirlpool was reached and Campbell swam tu shore, lib boat waa smashed. Ten years later came Peter Nlssen of Chicago, with a- covered boat. In which he safely made the voyage. It was his Inten tion, be said, to start a boat service through the rapids. H weighted his boat, with tons of Iron and went to take soundings near the Horseshoe falls. He had many escapes and his soundings amounted to nothing at all but notoriety. With a companion he made many trips about the river, the gorge, tbe fall and the whirlpool. Finally came the day when his boat waa smashed and he lost hla life. Barrels came into vogue again In IMA. a EE I FANCY VAL STORES CLOSES AT 5 P.M. During July and August, Except . Saturdays, at 9 P. M. LACES AND INSERTIONS Also Imitation cluny and real linen laces, many worth up to 10c a yard, bargain square, at 5c -.J if BRANDEIS .r! ill fjflLif Hundreds of Fine Lingerie Waists Women's and Misses' sizes. Many are beauti- f?fif fully trimmed, worth up to $1.50, at UOL Women's High Class Lingerie Waists Long and short sleeves, high and low necks, QCp stunning models, worth up to $3.00, at. Beautiful Lingerie and Tailored Waists Made of selected materials, carefully sized, d OA worth up to $3.50, at. $letJ when Martha E. Wagenfuhrer essayed a trip by herself. The occasion was the flr6t time a woman had attempted the trip alone. and is recorded a the only time a woman successfully made It alone. After being In the rapids an hour she was resuscitated. On July 14 of the same year, Miss Maud Wlllard and a dog were set adrift In a barrel. The barrel was immediately sucked in by the whirlpool and then shot Into the air, returning to the whirlpool. Late that night the barrel was recovered. When it was opened the dog leaped out. It was said that had the dog not been there Mis Wll lard might have lived. So much for the gorge and Its life-de manding whirlpool. No one had, up to this time, attempted to go over the falls. But on October, 20, 1901. came Mrs. Taylor with a barrel, in which she signified her Intention Of making the falls. Owing to a high wind, the barrel could not be towed Into place, and rumors had It then that the woman did not mean to make the trip. However, on the 24th, Mrs. Taylor kept her word. She waa strapped Into the barrel, which was pumped full of air and at the bottom of which was a blacksmith's anvil to keep the barrel upright. Within 200 yards of the Canadian shore, one of the accompanying boatmen rapped the barrel with his oar as a signal to the Imprisoned woman that sho was to be sent on her way. The barrel started with all speed toward the horsetmoe.- For a moment the barrel lingered at the top of the falls after navi gating the fifty-five or so feet of decline before the spot was reached.. It stood as a small black speck, the object In the eye of thousands. Then came the suction of the falls. Onward went the barrel, speeding, tilting, swinging. For an instant the barrel was sf en at the curve of the water. Then It dropped 165 feet Into the seething, mad waters of the lower river. The barrel righted Itself and floated downstream. It drifted Into an eddy on the Canadian side and landed on a rock. The barrel was secured and the cover re moved. Out stepped Mrs. Taylor, the first to conquer the falls. She waa bruised and shocked, but that was all. New York Tribune. LIBELOUS YARN ON THE WEST Alfalfa Feast I tlllsed as Means of Proclaiming; the Truth. Ex-Oovernor Alva Adams was the guest of honor at the recent alfalfa banquet in Rifle. Colo. a banquet wherein appeared alfalfa biscuit. alfalfa-stuffed turkey, mashed alfalfa (far better than mashed potatoes), alfalfa-leaf spinach, alfalfa tea and cider, alfalfa salad and alfalfa tooth picks. "Alfalfa Is delicious," said Mr. Adam at the banquet' end, as he idrew his nap kin across hi mouth. "I have eaten and drunk heartily of it. I can only speak of it In terms of the highest praise. "The people misjudge alfalfa. They mis- Judge It as the 'blled clothes story mis- Judges the civilisation of the west. "According to the libelous story, a Har vard professor visited the west on a geo logical expedition. In Albertus he put up with a rancher. The first night on the ranch he slept In his clothes, like the rest of the boys, out of politeness, but the fcecond night he complained about thl. " 'I can't stand it, he said to the rancher. 'I don't aeem to get my rest. My boot es pecially Incommode me." "Ho the hospitable rancher stretched a cowskin across the shack and that night the Harvard professor slept In his long white nightgown by himself. . "At daybreak tbe night foreman came In 1 I. Br X Lkar 4 U I I s a.Jf fc. 1 1 d nVAP I q oJ g- - 1 : JT re This is the final week of the greatest clearing wile in Omaha. All prices will again be reduced. Bargains that will be remembered for years. . GREATEST BARGAIN of the YEAR for the LAST WEEK of SALE YOUR UNRESTRICTED CHOICE OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK Any Woman's Spring or Summer Suit This includes all the white serge suits, all the fine silk suits, all the light weight wool tailored suits, in spring and summer styles. Positively worth up to $40.00 each; your choice, at . . UNRESTRICTED CHOICE OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK, Any Woman's Linen Suit at $5.00 Hundreds of stunning, practical summer suits of fine linens are in this lot. Many worth up to $25.00. Choice of 200 Fine Summer Wash Dresses Beautiful .Voile, Marquisette and Lingerie Midsummer Frocks, in all the very newest styles and highest class selected fabrics of this sea son. Every new and exclusive style. Dresses worth up to 7 rA $25.00; clearing sale special, at $fuU GREAT SALE while the professor was still slumbering. The foreman cast one glance at the sleeper, then tiptoed forth and said to the rancher. " 'Rather sudden, wa'n't It?" " 'What?' the rancher asked. . " 'Why the death of the old prof.' " 'He's not dead,' said the rancher, 'he's sleepln.' " 'Then what In tarnation Is he wearln' them blled clothes for?' snorted the fore man. 'Never saw a chap laid out in blled Rocky Mountain News. clothes afore, 'ceptln' he waa . dead.' " CUTTING OFF COAL BUSINESS Railroad Going- Through the Form of , Putting; Melons In Other Pastures. The managers and counsel for the Le high Valley, Delaware & Hudson and New York, Ontario & Western railroad com panies are perfecting plans for reorganiza tion of the Companies In accordance with the decision of the United States supreme court a month ago upon the commodities clause of the Hepburn act. The proposed reorganization pertains to the relationship between the railroad companies and the coal companies which they control and operate and, the design of the railroad managers is so to separate the coal busi ness from the railroad bualness that there can be no further complaint from Wash ington or elsewhere that the companies are not complying with the spirit of a law which was designed to separate the two form of enterprise. ' , The plan that is at present most favored by the Delaware & Hudson and the New York, Ontario Western is similar In general outline to that made effective by the Lackawanna two years ago. It pro vide for the sale at the mines of the coal mined by the company to an independent company organized for the purpose of marketing the coal. An alternative plan, which up to the present baa met with greater favor from the more influential directors of Lehigh Valley, contemplates the sale of the com pany' coal lands to a separate company to be organized for the purpose of acquir ing them and holding them In perpetuity with, of course, rights to railroad com pany stockholders to subscribe to the stock of the new coal company or distribution of the stock among them. The objection has been made that some of the company's coal lands are mortgaged under the rail road company' 10,000,000 consolidated .mortgage bonds, but it Is not proposed to disturb the bonds. The company will only convey, if the plan goes through, Us equity or Interest In the coal properties subject to the mortgage which secure the bonds. All the companies either own or have stock control of companies owning very valuable anthracite properties. The Dela ware & Hudson and the Lehigh Valley In particular control or own large tracts In the richest parts of the hard coal fields. .Ontario & ' Western Is also one of the standard anthracite roads, but Its coal business Is by no means so Important. The Lehigh Valley owns the entire capital stock of the Lehigh Valley Coal company, which produces an average of more than x.COO.OGO tons of anthracite a year. This Is Its most valuable coal property, but the railroad company also owna the entire capital stock of Coxa Bros. A Co., Incorporated, which owns about S.suO.OOO acres of coal land In Carbon and Luserne counties, Pennsylvania, The Delaware A Hudson owns In Its own name hard coal lands with an esti mated unmined tonnage of more than ano.000,000, and In addition owns the UNDER MUSLINS FOR WOMEN All kinds. Including popular combination garments, worth up to $-'.00. at am fnlUUUVJ $10 OF HIGH CLASS WAISTS entire capital , stock of the Hudson Coal company, which In turn own all the stock of the Schuylkill Coal and Iron company and the Bhanferoke Coal com pany. These companies have title to lands estimated to contain 425.000,000 tons of mlnable coal. The coal subsidiaries of Ontario and Western are the Scranton Coal company and the Elk Hill Coal and Iron company, which together have a capacity of 2,800,000 tons a year. Through the Scranton Coal company the Ontario & Western also controls the Black Diamond company with 1,000,000 tons more. ' In the test case the court decided In effect that ownership of stock In a coal company by a railroad company Is Illegal If It be established that the coal company Is a mere department of the railroad or a mere dummy to serve the purpose of the railroad in the coal mining and marketing thistnes. Since that decision the Department of Justice has let it be known that it proposed a rigid Investigation of the relations be tween the coal companies and the railroad companies and has promised that other suits would be Instituted. It was the opinion of the Lehigh Valley manager at first that fuVther litigation should be contested, but though the matter has not been formally decided by the board It Is understood that the majority are In favor of selling the coal lands to a new company to be organized by Lehigh Valley stock holders. Since Delaware & Hudson own all the stock of the coal companies In which it ha an Interest the case Is Identical with that of Lehigh Valley. Not so strong a case could be brought under the law against Ontario ft Western for the rea son that that company does not own all of the stock of It coal subsidiaries. It has, however, such a predominant in terest that a prosecution might be suc cessful. New York Sun. TIME SAVER FOR MOTORISTS Maker and Dealers Derlae Means Whereby to Prevent Idle Day. One of the most noteworthy develop ments of the automobile Industry In this country Is the growth and extension of service departments not only In the case of the older firms that make high-priced cars, but also as regards the makers of smaller and less expensive machines. This Idea Is deemed so Important by a group of business men Interested in a new fac- Wrinkles Disappear As 1! By Magic (From Denver Republican) "In the removal of wrinkles I have dis carded cosmetics entirely," write Mme. Corsan, the celebrated Parisian beauty expert. "The results they produce are deceptive and never permanent. Mas saging Is only partially successful and It's too slow a method. "I've never seen anything work such wonders as a simple, harmless solution any woman can prepare and ue at homo without i be, least trouble. A half pint of witch hazel and an ounce of good now dered saxollta are all you'll need. Mix the two and apply this refreshing solu tion to your face dally. The effect is marvelous Instantaneous. The skin be comes firmer, 'tighter' every wrinkle and sag Is affected. You feel so refreshed sfter, using the wash; you look refreshed, too; soon you will look ten years y ou n ger." A d v. 36-INCH CASHMERE SILKS In all shades for street snd even'rg. one yard wide, 1 1 39 value, per yard, at 98c 98c Voile and Marquisette Waists Many with hand embroidery trimmings, 1 AA worth up to $2.50, at. . . .' leUU "Women's Fine Hand Embroidered and Real Irish Lace Waists, also Marquisette and voiles. Actually worth up OA to $5.00, at $leOv Choice of Any King Tailored Waist, at one-third off former prices. Clearing sale of all our silk and net tf V FA waifts, worth up to $7.50, at v&vj tory producing high-grade cars that they established a service department before their plant had been in full operation for one year. Nor haa this movement, which means so much to the owner and user of cars, been confined to manufacturers alone, but wide-awake and enterprising dealers all over this broad land of our have been and are establishing service departments that In many cases have oost as much to equip as many of the automobile manu facturing plants of a few years ago. The Fry EUloney Saving Sale Goodby to our spring and summer footwear. While there is plenty of wear ing time for oxfords and pumps, the sell ing time is getting short. So we have cut the price of all men's, women's and children's oxfords and pumps. It will pay you to shoe the entire family at this Money-Saving Sale. Can you stay away from these bargains? For IVIen Johnson & Murphy's and Boyden's patent IT colt oxfords. McDonald & Kiley's and other good makes, tr m $5.00 patents and Ik XJ dulls. Several linos of $5.00 tan low cuts .$3.85 at. 15 lines patent and dull low cuts that were 9 $4.00, now Kont...v..tl Howard & Foster's $4.00 tan and black low (go AT cuts 30 lines of $4.00 and $3.50 patent and dull Jfj low cuts, now VU M.9 300 pairs broken lines, small sizes, $4.00 and $3.50 oxfords. . . JU5 See the Great Display of Bargains in Our Show Windows SIXTEENTH A!!D DOUGLAS STREETS 32-INCH CHAMBRAY In blue, gray and brown, made to sell at 12c a yard; from the bolt. Monday at the hi, regular gingham q department, yard. IbiNemcnt .J 11m HffiBerikSi t tin. .HI 25c and 35c GINGHAMS, at 15c Per Yard Olnsham Dept. Basement The standard Wm. Ander son's 32-Inch replivrs. the famous I,a Uelno Rinnhivrs. the celebrated liausro Inch zephyrs, lmjt:rtc t ir ni Scotland by R. A. Whytlaw & Sons. Kor years these "( and :!5c woven dress fabifcn' have been recognized tl.c world over for giving; service and making the prettiest dresses. Check-, plnlils. stripes and plain colors, from the bolt, at. yard 15c DRESS SILKS One large table of foulards, messalines, plain and ian" taffetas, tub silks, etc., 69c to 9S( values, at, yard 94 Bleached FRUIT OF THE LOOM SHEETING Worth 12 Vac a yard, the bolt on bar gain square, in basement, per yd trom 25c 8-4 Bleached FRUIT OF THE LOOM SHEETING Regular 30c value from the bolt on bargain m square, Monday, Ma at, per yard lul cardinal principle 'of the service depart ment, whether It be maintained by manu facturer or dealer, is the prevention of Idle days for car owners. Leslie' Weekly. Colonel 8. W. Taylor Retires. WASHINGTON. July 22. -Colonel Sydney W. Taylor. Second Field artillery, the com mander of the Department of the Columbia, him been nlaced on the retired lint nn hln service. For Women Laird & Schober's patent, dull and buck pumps and vaTJ!.a.n.d.$.5;!0. ..53.85 Wright & Peters' tan and black Velooze Pumps Q OP -$5.00 values $0Od Ziegler liros.' and "Wright Peters' Oxfords and Pumps, $4 values...' $2.95 About thirty lines, all good makes, low eutH, $4ffA QC values QmVd 500 pairs patent and dull Ox fords and Pumps, $4 Mr nnd $3.50 values W&Ad Your choice of 300 pairs tan Oxfords, that were $5 and $4 $2.45 And then a lot of small sizes and narrow widths, Qr $5, $4 and $3.50; now.$icfv BRANDEIS STORES